Expression of Cellular Proteins in Normal and Transformed Human Cultured Cells and Tumors: Two-Dimensional Gel Electrophoresis as a Tool to Study Neoplastic Transformation and Cancer

Author(s):  
JULIO E. CELIS ◽  
RODRIGO BRAVO ◽  
PETER MOSE LARSEN ◽  
STEPHEN J. FEY ◽  
JAIME BELLATIN ◽  
...  
1986 ◽  
Vol 64 (8) ◽  
pp. 750-757 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Desrosiers ◽  
Robert M. Tanguay

The effects of a heat shock or arsenite treatment on the methylation and acetylation of core histones have been investigated in Drosophila cultured cells. The decrease in H3 methylation, which is observed during a heat shock, is not a demethylation process, but results from methylation arrest. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis leaves no ambiguity concerning the identity of H2B as a methylated protein, since H2B and D2, a nuclear nonhistone protein, which comigrate on one-dimensional gels, are well separated on these gels. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis in the presence of Triton X-100 resolves each of the core histones into multiple forms resulting from posttranslational modifications. There are apparently, however, no histone variants in cultured Drosophila cells. At 23 °C, the various forms of the core histones resolved on two-dimensional gels are methylated. Under heat-shock or arsenite treatment, the methylation of all forms of H3 is decreased, while that of the various forms of H2B increases. These stress conditions also induce a generalized diminution in the acetylation of all forms of core histones. In the course of a heat shock, the synthesis of H2B is increased and this newly synthesized histone remains unacetylated during the shock. These changes in the patterns of core histone methylation and acetylation may be correlated with the reorganization of gene activity brought about by the heat shock.


1981 ◽  
Vol 198 (3) ◽  
pp. 677-682 ◽  
Author(s):  
F A Firgaira ◽  
K H Choo ◽  
R G H Cotton ◽  
D M Danks

Radioimmunoassay, immunoprecipitation, affinity chromatography and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis were used to test cultured cells from three families with dihydropteridine reductase deficiency for a catalytically incompetent product of the mutant gene. No mutant enzyme was detected in one dihydropteridine reductase-deficient homozygote or in her parents. A second homozygote and both her parents had easily detectable concentrations of inactive mutant enzyme. In a third family one parent fitted into each of these categories.


1982 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 766-781 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Bravo ◽  
J E Celis

Abstract A total of 1357 polypeptides [946 acidic (isoelectric focusing) and 411 basic (nonequilibrium pH-gradient electrophoresis)] from human HeLa cells have been separated and catalogued with use of high-resolution two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Of these polypeptides, 1266 were detected by labeling cells with [35S]methionine, while the rest were revealed by silver staining or by labeling with a mixture of 16 14C-labeled amino acids. For convenience, all these polypeptides have been numbered and are indicated in a large fold-out protein map. The percentages of some of the major 14C-labeled proteins have been determined, and for some we list a few characteristics such as: variation during the cell cycle; cellular distribution in cytoplasts and karyoplasts; presence in Triton- and salt-extracted cytoskeletons; and phosphorylation and sensitivity to neoplastic transformation.


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